Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] [verb] in with " in BNC.
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1 | The tackle looked two-footed but Hirst argued : ‘ I only went in with one — my right foot scraped the ground . ’ |
2 | ‘ In all games I coach I never go in with the understanding that there is only one person for one position . |
3 | You only go in with |
4 | and you just walk in with it , that ! |
5 | I know it was n't my birthday you just came in with it did n't you ? |
6 | ‘ Do you still keep in with the great man Dander ? ’ |
7 | She often came in with her mother and sister . |
8 | Giovanna said she often sat in with the Kettering children if their parents were out and would be glad to do the same for the Signora Pargeter . |
9 | After much deliberation by the judges , the winners of the best-named team was ‘ Teenagers Under Stress ’ ( if any of you teenagers are reading this can you please ring in with your address so that we can send you your prizes ) and the winners of the best-dressed team were ‘ Five Prunes Named Joe ’ . |
10 | Then you simply phone in with a bid for whatever item takes your fancy — be it a timeshare apartment in Beverly Hills or an ansaphone . |
11 | ‘ You never fitted in with Julius 's lifestyle , ’ Eleanor went on relentlessly . |
12 | Well several people did bring in board games but Mr Barnes was ‘ too busy ’ to organise us , so we just joined in with whatever we fancied . |
13 | The only exception to this is that the test machine arrived without one of its little rubber feet , something that I feel might happen quite regularly , given that they just screw in with a small self-tapping screw , and have no supporting adhesive to really make things permanent . |
14 | Comment : Indirect questions are used all the time by people who need their status boosting through being given buckets of approval , or who are looking for a reason for punishing other people should they not fall in with the anticipated scenario . |
15 | They also tied in with a felt ‘ horizontal ’ structure in the work . |
16 | I think , so it just blends in with the border round |
17 | Having established himself at Ince , Killigrew set off for the busy mercantile town of Plymouth , where he soon fell in with a merchant , Tremayne , who had a daughter , Mary . |
18 | But had he not fallen in with it too readily and too rapidly simply because it was a testimony to his secure tenure , a declaration before the world that he was a king indeed , and his progeny fit mates for the royalty of Europe ? |
19 | If he ever goes in with Tyson , he could be taken for a foolish dog . |
20 | If he ever goes in with Tyson , he could be taken for a foolish dog . |
21 | ‘ Despite all the talk about Benn boxing behind his jab , he still rushes in with his head exposed and I will pick my counters just like Lennox Lewis did on Saturday . ’ |
22 | ( It hardly fitted in with the Idealist conception of the active citizen ) . |
23 | If it detects any sudden absence of juice , it automatically kicks in with its battery , allowing you to shut down gracefully with no loss of data . |
24 | ‘ It also fits in with work being carried out at other research centres . |
25 | But it also ties in with cutting costs . |
26 | Having refurbished two bits of year-old evidence to support the new Libyan thesis , he now weighed in with a two-year-old intelligence report about a meeting in Tripoli before the bombing — in mid-November 1988 — at which the Libyans were said to have taken over responsibility for the attack from the PFLP — GC after Jibril 's West German cell was broken up . |
27 | What are we doing in terms of establishing contacts right across the range with Russia , to keep it closely tied in with western Europe ? |
28 | But it actually comes in with differentiation , to work out circuits . |